The Great Australian Farce
Satire as a Statutory Instrument

Politics & Power  ·  National Affairs  ·  2026

Welcome to Australia: voting is mandatory, belief is optional, and the sausage costs extra

A unified account of the Australian governing style — slogans before infrastructure, corridors before citizens, and the public reliably holding the downside. Different sectors, different statutes, same rope.

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Commentary  ·  Energy Crisis  ·  Workers

The Last Person in the Chain

On fuel drive-offs, workers being docked for theft they didn't commit, and the reliable Australian habit of making the most exposed people absorb the cost of every failure above them.

National Politics  ·  Energy Security

The Cowards in Canberra Broke the Country. Now They Want Us to Pay for It.

On fuel security, strategic hollowing, and the particular administrative achievement of failing privately and charging publicly.

Public Order  ·  Queensland

Queensland's New Growth Industry: The Bouncer-Psychiatrist

On move-on powers, the sanitisation of the public square, and the particular achievement of turning social fragility into statute.

Editorial Position

What this publication believes

Authority must justify itself. Systems must serve life rather than trap it. Truth must survive contact with the people it is supposed to describe.

The Great Australian Farce exists because the gap between official language and observable reality in this country has become too wide, too consistent, and too consequential to leave unremarked.

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Satire as a Statutory Instrument
When the system produces documentation proving its own incompetence, the only honest response is to read it back to the room.
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